Verse 1
1 Samuel 28:1. The Philistines
gathered their armies together —
Sir Isaac Newton judges that
they were recruited about this
time by vast numbers of men
driven out of Egypt by Amasis.
This probably was one reason why
they resolved on a new war with
Israel, to which, however,
Samuel’s death and David’s
disgrace were doubtless
additional motives. Achish said
to David, Thou shalt go out with
me to battle — Achish formed
this resolution in consequence
of his knowledge of David’s
merit, and the thorough
confidence he had in his
fidelity.
Verse 2
1 Samuel 28:2. David said,
Surely thou shalt know what thy
servant can do — He answered
ambiguously, as he did before.
Achish said, Therefore will I
make thee keeper of my head —
That is, he promised to make him
captain of his life-guard,
which, we find by the sequel, he
accordingly did. Achish
evidently understood David as
promising that he would do his
best to serve him. Delaney
thinks that David gave Achish a
doubtful answer, because he
would not resolve upon so
extraordinary a step without
consulting God, either by his
priest or his prophet. And that,
as he proceeded so far as to
attend Achish to Aphek, the
place appointed for the
assembling of the Philistine
forces, there is no reason to
doubt that he went thither with
honest intentions toward his
protector, and that he did it by
the divine permission.
Verse 3
1 Samuel 28:3. Now Samuel was
dead, &c. — This was observed
before, 1 Samuel 25:1, but is
repeated here again to show that
Saul was now sensible of his
loss, wanting his advice in a
time of great distress. Saul had
put away those that had familiar
spirits — According to the
divine command, Leviticus 20:27,
which perhaps he had executed in
the beginning of his reign, when
he was directed by Samuel.
Verse 5
1 Samuel 28:5. His heart greatly
trembled — When he saw their
numbers, their orders, and their
appointments, he judged himself
to be greatly overpowered, and
fell into great terror upon the
prospect. Had he kept close to
God he needed not to have feared
all the armies of the
Philistines.
Verse 6
1 Samuel 28:6. When Saul
inquired of the Lord — This
seems to contradict what is
affirmed 1 Chronicles 10:14,
that he did not inquire of the
Lord, which is assigned as the
reason why the Lord slew him.
But Rabbi Kimchi, and others,
thus reconcile these two places.
That since he did not continue
to inquire of him, but went to a
diviner, it was all one as if he
had not inquired at all; for he
did it faintly, coldly, and
indifferently. A learned Jew,
Samuel Laniado, remarks here:
“He whose heart is perfect with
God, lifts up his eyes unto him,
and fixes them on him; hoping in
him, though he doth not
presently hear him; and
perseveres in his expectation
and confidence, firmly setting a
resolution to wait upon him. But
so did not Saul, who was remiss
and negligent, saying in his
heart, If God will not hear me,
I will go and consult a familiar
spirit.” The Lord answered him
not — Nor is it to be wondered
that he should not answer a man
of such a disposition. Neither
by dreams — By which perhaps he
prayed that God would inform
him. Nor by Urim — It appears by
this, that, Abiathar having fled
to David and taken the ephod
with him, Saul had set up
another high-priest, and made an
ephod in imitation of the sacred
one, not considering the
peculiar sanctity of that which
God had appointed, and by which
alone he had promised to
manifest himself. Nor by
prophets — A school of whom, no
doubt, was still remaining at
Ramah, over which Samuel had
presided.
Verse 7
1 Samuel 28:7. Seek me a woman
that hath a familiar spirit —
That converses with evil
spirits, or hath power to call
up, or make to appear, the
spirits of dead persons, in
order to answer questions, or
give information of what may be
inquired of them: see on
Deuteronomy 18:10-11. Saul
mentions a woman rather than a
man, because the weaker sex were
most addicted to these
practices. In this he acted like
a distracted man, who now
approved what he had before
condemned. He had partly cut
off, and partly frighted away
wizards, sorcerers, and such as
had, or professed to have, these
familiar spirits, and now he
seeks unto them! What will not
fear and folly force men to! How
such a practice as this came to
be used at first, and on what
pretence, we cannot now say; but
it appears to have been very
ancient, because we find express
laws against it in the books of
Moses. It is probable it had its
rise in Egypt, where an
over-strained search after, and
pretence to knowledge, made many
fall into the strangest
absurdities and impieties that
ever entered into the human
heart. And in all likelihood,
not only the Israelites, but the
heathen, who, we find, in
general used this practice, were
first infected with it from
thence. In all probability,
those who pretended to this
power were generally impostors,
who only deceived those who
consulted them by delusive
tricks; yet we may draw this
important conclusion from it,
that it has always been a
prevailing notion among all
people, that the soul of man
still subsists in another state
after the body is dead; for this
practice evidently supposes, and
indeed was built on this belief.
Verse 8
1 Samuel 28:8. Saul disguised
himself — Both because he was
ashamed to be known, or thought
guilty of this practice, and
because he suspected the woman,
if she knew him, would not
practise her art before him. And
he went — In all haste that very
night, stripped of his regal
apparel, and attended only by
two companions. How nearly
allied are infidelity and
impiety to superstition; and
what will not they do who will
not confide in and obey God! But
a few hours before he was too
haughty to profess himself the
servant of the living God, and
to observe his laws, and now he
is the slave of his fears and
follies! “The most infidel man,”
says Delaney, “that I ever
conversed with, was, by the
accounts of those who best knew
him, the most superstitious.”
Verse 11
1 Samuel 28:11. He said, Bring
me up Samuel — As he had
formerly experienced Samuel’s
kindness and compassion, so now
he expected it in his deep
distress.
Verse 12
1 Samuel 28:12. And when the
woman saw Samuel — The particle
when, which our translators have
inserted here, and which is not
in the original text,
embarrasses the sense, and is
calculated to give the reader a
wrong idea of this transaction,
leading him to think that some
space of time intervened between
Saul’s request and Samuel’s
appearance, during which the
woman was employed in practising
her art. Whereas the Hebrew
implies no such thing. It is
literally, And he (Saul) said,
Bring me up Samuel; and the
woman saw Samuel, and cried with
a loud voice, &c. — The true
state of this affair seems to
have been, that as soon as Saul
had signified whom he wished to
have brought up, the woman was
about to proceed to her charms
and incantations, “designing,”
says Dr. Dodd, “either to put
some trick upon Saul, by
producing an accomplice to
represent Samuel; or, may we not
believe that evil spirits,
really assisting on such
occasions, might, and did come
in to the aid of execrable
wretches, sold to their service
like this woman!” Be this,
however, as it may, contrary to
all her expectation, the moment
Saul had mentioned the name of
Samuel, the woman saw a
venerable figure before her,
which made her shriek out with
astonishment, Why hast thou
deceived me? for thou art Saul —
She knew this appearance was not
owing to any contrivance of her
own, or her associates. It was
what she in no wise expected;
and she immediately concluded,
that it could be no less a
person than the king of Israel
that this venerable person was
really sent to. From all the
circumstances of the relation,
it appears that the woman
herself was convinced, as the
Egyptian magicians were upon
another occasion, that this was
the finger of God. To suppose
that the woman herself, by her
familiar spirit or spells,
raised Samuel, or any evil
spirit that personated him; or
that she put a trick upon Saul,
by causing one of her associates
to appear as Samuel, is so
contrary to reason, and the
circumstances of the story, that
no unprejudiced mind can well,
upon an attentive perusal, take
it in any such light. Indeed,
the credit of the historian is
implicated in this relation. He
expressly says the woman saw
Samuel, and if we believe that
she did not see Samuel, but only
an evil spirit personating him,
we must call in question either
the ability or integrity of the
sacred writer: we must conceive
either that he did not know what
he wrote about, or that he
designed to deceive his readers.
Supposing then that both the
woman and Saul might be deceived
by an impostor in Samuel’s
guise; yet we ask, Was this
author deceived? Or did he mean
to deceive us, when he gives us
to understand, that the woman
saw Samuel, and was frighted at
the sight!
Verse 13
1 Samuel 28:13. The woman said,
I saw gods ascending — The
original word here used is
elohim; and is with equal
propriety rendered God, a god,
or gods; when spoken of Jehovah
it is translated God in the
Scriptures; but when meant of
the false gods of the heathen,
of angels or of magistrates,
which it sometimes is, it is
generally rendered in the plural
number. As it is plain the woman
saw and spoke only of one
person, it should evidently be
translated a god here, that is,
a divine or glorious person,
full of majesty and splendour,
exceeding not only mortal men,
but common ghosts. Dr. Waterland
renders it, a venerable person,
and Mr. Locke says, it here
signifies an angel or a judge,
and that in the singular number.
The same word certainly means
magistrates, Psalms 82:1-6.
Verse 14
1 Samuel 28:14. An old man
coming up — Although this
appearance of Samuel is
represented by the woman as
coming up out of the earth,
there is no reason to think that
it did so in fact. Rather, the
woman spoke according to the
prevailing notion of both Jews
and heathen of those days, that
the place of abode of separate
souls was under the earth. This
opinion was the foundation of
necromancy, or divining by the
dead; and from a foolish
supposition that they could call
the dead from their sepulchres
to consult them, it is that the
Jews in the time of Isaiah are
accused of having sacrificed in
the gardens, and of remaining
among the graves, for their
sepulchres were in gardens,
Isaiah 65:3-4; and Isaiah 29:4.
Covered with a mantle — The
usual habit of prophets, and
particularly of Samuel, 1 Samuel
15:27. And Saul perceived that
it was Samuel — But if it was
not he, but another person, this
declaration of the sacred writer
is not true. It may be observed
further, that the word ידע
jedang, here rendered perceived,
properly signifies to know, and
sometimes to see. And the
pronoun הוא hu, himself, which
our translators have left out,
is also added after the name
Samuel. So that the words,
literally translated, are, Saul
knew that it was Samuel himself.
Verse 15
1 Samuel 28:15. Why hast thou
disquieted me? — “Houbigant
observes very justly, that
Samuel complains not of the
woman, but of Saul, for
disquieting him; from whence it
follows that Samuel was not
raised up by her magic arts, but
by the will of God. Samuel’s
disquiet plainly arose from
Saul’s hardened impenitence. It
was this that grieved and
provoked him; and so it should
be translated; Why hast thou
provoked me, to make me rise up?
Why dost thou ask of me, seeing
the Lord is departed from thee?
But is it probable, say some,
that God, who had refused to
answer Saul by all the
accustomed methods, would, as it
were, submit himself to the
superstition of this prince,
and, to satisfy him, raise up
Samuel to apprize him of his
destiny? We answer, 1st, That
Saul had not consulted God
either by Urim or by prophets;
for the Urim was with David; and
there was probably no prophet
then alive to whom God
communicated himself either by
vision or in any other way; and
that in the methods he had
employed he had conducted
himself hypocritically and
without any right impression of
religion. 2d, We answer, that
Saul, in danger, and anxious
about the event of it, applies
to a pythoness to assist him by
her incantations, and to call up
the spirit of Samuel; but before
she begins one word of her
spells or charms the prophet
interposes, frightens her, and
pronounces Saul’s doom; and she
herself witnesses the truth of
his appearance. If the thing is
singular, if the event is
extraordinary, it does not
follow that it is false, much
less that it is impossible. God
is not so tied down to his own
institutions that he cannot at
any time depart from them. That
God should manifest himself by
his prophets, to encourage or
countenance what he himself had
forbidden, is indeed very
unlikely, or, to speak more
justly, very absurd to suppose.
But that he should interpose to
reprove that practice, which was
the case at present, is
doubtless no way incredible or
improbable.” — Delaney and Dodd.
Saul answered and said, I am
sore distressed, &c. — Finding
that God would give no answer to
him, and being almost in
despair, he seems to have
foolishly flattered himself that
he might be able to obtain some
answer to his petitions by means
of that holy prophet, whom he
knew to have had a sincere
regard for him in his life-time.
But the prophet, in his answer
in the next verse, gives him to
know how incapable he was of
doing him any service, seeing
that the Lord was departed from
him and become his enemy. From
hence we may see the vanity and
absurdity of invoking saints,
&c., as their intercession can
no way avail us, when by our
wickedness we have made God our
enemy. One would think this
reply of Samuel would be
sufficient to convince any
Christian of the folly of any
such application. Therefore I
have called thee, &c. — Happy
had it been for him if he had
called Samuel sooner, or,
rather, the God of Samuel. It
was now too late; destruction
was at hand, and God had
determined it should not be
stayed.
Verse 17-18
1 Samuel 28:17-18. The Lord hath
rent the kingdom out of thy
hand, &c. — Here the prophet
foretels that Saul should that
day be stripped of the kingdom,
and that it should be given to
David. Then follows what nothing
but infinite, unerring
prescience could predict; an
exact, minute, precise account
of all the circumstances of the
then depending event! Because
thou obeyedst not the voice of
the Lord — Saul’s sin in killing
the Lord’s priests, and in
seeking to kill David, is not
here mentioned, because the
decree of taking the kingdom
from him was passed before those
sins were committed. Delaney
asks here, “Would an impostor”
(for such this apparition must
have been, if it were not
Samuel) “have been so very
zealous for a strict observance
of the law and commands of God;
and so rigid in pronouncing
divine vengeance upon the
violation of them; and in the
depth of his cunning have
limited that vengeance to time,
place, and person; and all this
at no greater distance than the
next day? These suppositions are
too wild to be seriously
confuted; they are the very
reverse of what should and would
have been done on such an
occasion, had imposture
interfered in it. Every one
knows the business of impostors
is to flatter, to delude, to
deceive, to answer doubtfully;
to promise good and put off the
evil; it was this woman’s
business in a particular manner
to act thus. Had she promised
Saul victory, and the success
had answered, she was sure of
considerable advantage. He, who
could have no benefit from
priests or from prophets, would,
doubtless, have had her in high
honour, and with good reason. If
he died in the battle, all was
safe; and even if he escaped and
was worsted, what she said would
at least have been taken for an
indication of good wishes to the
king and to his people; and so
would be more likely to escape
any after inquiry. Whereas, if
she prognosticated evil to the
royal race, she was sure of
destruction, if the event did
not at once justify and save
her.”
Verse 19
1 Samuel 28:19. Moreover, the
Lord will also deliver, &c. —
Samuel here predicts three
things: 1st, That the Lord would
deliver Israel, with Saul, into
the hand of the Philistines. 2d,
That Saul and his sons (namely,
the three that were with him in
the camp) should be with him,
that is, should, like him, be in
the state of the dead, or
another world. 3d, That this
should take place on the morrow.
Now as no evil spirit or
impostor of any kind could
possibly know these particulars,
which were all exactly
accomplished next day, nor even
Samuel himself, unless he had
been divinely inspired with the
knowledge of them, it is
surprising that any person
should imagine that this
appearance of Samuel was either
a human or diabolical imposture;
for it is evident it could only
proceed from the omniscient God.
And if we consider the whole
attentively, we may see a
peculiar propriety in it. When
Samuel denounced God’s judgments
upon Saul he was clad in a
mantle, which Saul tore on that
occasion. He now came to repeat
and to ratify the sentence then
denounced; and, to strike him
with fuller conviction, he
appears in the same dress, the
same mantle, in which he
denounced that sentence. And
since he now again denounced a
rending of the kingdom from
Saul’s posterity, why may we not
presume that the mantle showed
now the same rent which was the
emblem of that rending? Is it
irrational to suppose that when
he spoke of this he held up the
mantle and pointed to the rent?
It is well known the prophets
were men of much action in their
speaking, and often illustrated
their predictions by emblems. It
may be observed further, that
although Samuel in his lifetime
often reproved Saul for his
guilt, and told him that God had
given away his kingdom from him
for that guilt; yet he never
told him to whom, nor when the
sentence should be executed upon
him. How proper, then, to raise
from the dead the same prophet
who predicted that sentence, to
confirm it; to tell him that the
kingdom should be taken from him
that day; and to name the very
person to whom it should be
given; to show by whom, and
where, and how the sentence
should be executed; and that the
execution of it was instant, and
should be deferred no longer.
Was not this an occasion worthy
of the divine interposition? The
son of Sirach, who probably had
as much wisdom, penetration, and
piety, as any critic that came
after him, is clearly of opinion
with the sacred historian, that
it was Samuel himself who
foretold the fate of Saul and
his house in this interview. And
it is no ill presumption that
his judgment was also that of
the Jewish Church upon this
head. It has been a question
with some, whether the Jews had
any belief in the immortality of
the soul? This history is a full
decision upon that point, and
perhaps the establishment of
that truth upon the foot of
sensible evidence, was not the
lowest end of Samuel’s
appearance upon this occasion.
See Delaney.
Verse 20
1 Samuel 28:20. Then Saul fell
straightway all along on the
earth — Struck to the heart, as
if the archers of the
Philistines had already hit him,
at the hearing this dreadful
sentence pronounced upon
himself, his family, and people;
and overcome with astonishment
and terror. And was sore afraid
because of the words of Samuel —
Observe, reader, the words of
Samuel, says the inspired
historian, and not the words of
Satan, or any evil spirit
personating Samuel. These words,
which he now fully believed, and
which were the more awful as
being pronounced by a departed
spirit, sent from the invisible
world on purpose to pronounce
them, even the spirit of a great
and holy prophet, whom he had
once highly revered, and to
whom, under God, he had owed all
his elevation; these words so
operated upon his mind, weakened
and oppressed with guilt, and
upon his body, exhausted with
fatigue and fasting, that no
strength, or power of motion,
was left in him; and he fell at
his full length as dead upon the
floor. Unhappy Saul! he now
reaps the bitter fruits of
forsaking God, and of being
therefore forsaken by him, and
of his many great and aggravated
crimes. Vengeance, which had
long hovered over him, and
waited in long-suffering for his
repentance, now advances with
large and rapid strides, and his
doom approaches. He is deeply
sensible of it, and is
overwhelmed with horror and
dismay on the account thereof.
Verse 25
1 Samuel 28:25. They arose up
and went away that night — “What
remorse,”
says Delaney, “what desolation
of mind, what horrors of guilt,
what terrors and anticipations
of divine wrath haunted him by
the way, may no reader ever
learn from his own experience!”
Some have expressed a hope, that
as, no doubt, his past sins were
now brought to his remembrance,
he felt contrition for them. Of
this, however, the Holy Ghost is
silent; and considering that at
last he was guilty of
self-murder we have no reason to
think he experienced any
repentance that was of any
service to his immortal
interests. |